If by "most forms of Christianity" you mean the form practiced by most Christians, that would be Roman Catholicism, and that makes the sacrament Eucharist. Other Christians, especially Protestants, do not believe in transubstantiation. That is to say, they do not believe that they actually take Christ into the body of the believer.
Roman Catholic AnswerThe central sacrament in Christianity is the most holy Eucharist, the "source and summit of the Christian life" (Vatican Council II). It is the sacrament to which all of the others tend and/or flow from. The Eucharist is the actual Body and Blood, Soul and Divinity of Our Blessed Lord, Jesus Christ.
In The Christian sacrament, By William A. Van Roo, he calls the Church the "prime sacrament", and quotes E Schillebeeckx, O.P. from his book, Christ, the Sacrament of the Encounter with God, that Christ is the prime Sacrament. These views can be reconciled in that the Church is the Mystical Body of Christ.
Yes Steve Perry is very much a believer in christ.
In The Christian sacrament, By William A. Van Roo, he calls the Church the "prime sacrament", and quotes E Schillebeeckx, O.P. from his book, Christ, the Sacrament of the Encounter with God, that Christ is the prime Sacrament. These views can be reconciled in that the Church is the Mystical Body of Christ.
I suppose that might depend on the particular religion in question, but in Christianity, no, the believer is not always right. The whole point of Christianity is that we were wrong, we sinned, and that sin separated us from God, which required Jesus Christ dying on the cross to bring us back into a relationship with God.
The Sacraments are Christ's Gifts to His Church. Every Sacrament we receive, we receive Him.
If Jesus Christ had not died on the cross or not have been resurrected there would be no Christianity. Jesus Christ is Christianity. Christ ---ianity.
no
To receive Christ in their lives.
Christianity stared in Israel. After the death of Christ.
In the LDS religion (Mormon) it is believed that the bread of the Sacrament is symbolic of the body of Christ as stated in Matthew 26:26 and in The Doctrine and Covernants 20:77. The Sacrament is taken to renew or remember ones covenants made at baptism - to always remember Christ and to be a member of His church, which could be stated as a member of the body of Christ.
The sacraments are visible signs instituted by Christ to give us grace. They signify and confer the grace they signify, strengthening our relationship with God and our commitment to live as Christians. Each sacrament has its own specific significance and purpose in the life of a believer.